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    marye
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    Nuclear power! Carcinogenic cell phones! The Stanley Cup! and the usual parade of kids dancing and shaking their bones, politicians throwing stones, etc. Discuss.

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  • Anonymous (not verified)
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    No chatter...
    ...from the terrorist networks after Ayman Al-Zawahiri, new AQ head, calls for revenge attacks on America for the killing of OBL. The problem is, there usually is a lot of chatter and when it is missing, that is when Homeland Security starts to go nuts. We are now in the waiting time. The FBI has admitted that it has lost track of many people in the Minneapolis area (Somalis', etc.) who have been to terrorist training camps. Anybody planning a plane trip before 9/11 should see increased security. More air marshals too, I should imagine. I think a lot of people in high government posts are uncomfortable right now and they are not saying much.
  • Anonymous (not verified)
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    YOU are the Eyes of the World, Jonapi!
    And yeah, just back from two weeks off art the beach, holiday on the seashore. How can I make a comment on starving children in Ethiopia? Saw the news and got sick the other night, had to remind myself to keep it off, restore my head. The reporter was in Mogadishu, Somalia. She was interviewing one of the top officers in the African Peacekeepers, drawn from other countries' armories and people. He said they were in the worst place on earth. The soccer stadium in long weeds, the bombed out buildings, IEDs. A Kalashnikov fires and the reporter and soldiers scramble for cover. The world is responding to this humanitarian crisis but food coming in through here first had to go through civil war in a country without a government for 20 years. Who is making the war here? Al Shabob (I am prompted to say "Shish Kabob") the AQ backed militias trying to take Somalia and turn the country into a terrorist training camp. They finally realized that they were killing the locals and pulled back to allow the pent up need for food distribution. Too little, too late as a woman with her kids cries "Where is the humanity?" Where, indeed? So the camps grow in Dadhob, Kenya and we live our lives of luxury and privilege... Look up MSNBC.com for a list of charities to make a donation to feed these people.
  • Anonymous (not verified)
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    aerial signal African drought
    i cried salt water.for what it's worth. brown skin painted on weak bone. shrunken carcass; something for the dust to claim. unholy abandonment for our viewing pleasure. no water no food no hope no life but do try, please. cue ball eyes in that head on a stick. our disconnect is perfect. we weep for a while and sleep soundly. hang in there little one. hang in there as the man with the camera brings image not grain. lens into lenses and my body sagged. sagged with all the hurt; a shriek that could summon God and shatter your semicircular canal. it doesn't bring him of course; he only seems to listen. where did we go so wrong when we can look straight into the eyes of a dying child and do nothing? a shameful spectacle. a suffering soul a stain on our species. sick and disgust as their organs fail. we've released so much pain into the world that the ether seeps decay. ghastly fog that chokes our brothers and sisters. suffocates and laughs. it's head seemed swollen. his head? her head? i couldn't tell. emaciated. fragile. eyes of ache and injustice. twisted with hurt. i could tell it was broken. i couldn't tell what it thought of me. why would i let a part of me suffer? for what purpose would i cut off one's own arm? because that's what i'm doing when i'm complicit in starving a life more pure and beautiful than mine. they ARE my life, have i not figured that out yet? he/she got better by the way; i saw it on the news. little body became more like yours and mine. sunken cheeks expanded and eye's like a cow. hope for that child at least. let's hope Aids doesn't pay a visit; please God, leave them alone for a while. reading this back, a thought of Arsenal's new signing Miyaichi entered my head; his debut on Saturday. looking forward to that. how shameful.
  • riggsjr
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    Riots
    Have been gone for a couple of days on a break, not able to see much news footage but heard of the spread of the riots in England. I put on the news today and what do I see...shock horror it's everybody else's fault. Nick (nothing to do with me) Clegg saying we need to step back and look at the whole picture, need to find reasons etc. Well Nick there are a few good people on this very thread who could tell you what has gone wrong. It is the fact that a Tory Government in the 1980's gave up on Britain being an Industrialised nation and decided we would be better as a 'Service Industry', traditional jobs that had served generations for years went by the wayside for ever.However before we point fingers let me return to a topic dealt with previously. I feel that nowadays no one wants to PAY for anything, the arrival of the internet was a major step forward in progress but also I feel led to some of the problems we have today. How many times do we hear "don't buy that here, you will get it cheaper o the net", "don't buy it off that site search elsewhere. you'll get it cheaper". Now we have no Record stores,(I need a stylus for my turntable, nearest store 30 miles away!). Can't find a decent bookstore, sometimes you just want to browse and maybe stumble across something new. The point of this ramble? No stores, No jobs, no service industry and as we don't have heavy industry what the F..are people supposed to do for a living? I was lucky enough to get to take early retirement three years ago but it breaks my heart when I travel around town and see kids 17,18,19,20 and above wandering around with nothing to do and no prospect of anything to do. I could of course went down the road of telling that I lived for many years in a deprived area with no Community Centres, no Youth Clubs, and we spent every night walking miles around the surrounding countryside listening to the radio with no intention of causing a disturbance, but that was then this is now at least I had a job and was lucky enough to continually work for 41 years without being unemployed, which of todays youngsters will be able to say that? Answers on a post card....... Sorry folks just back and ranting already. P.S I know there were lots of the people in the riots just using it as an excuse to loot and rob, but that has been covered most eloquently covered previously by jonapi.
  • gratefaldean
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    I've never been more
    Energized and happy in my professional life than 1995-2005 with Ray Anderson as the CEO and Chairman of the company I worked for. A truly inspired and inspiring business leader, he passed away early this week. He was a self-confessed "plunderer of the earth" who experienced a green epiphany in 1994 and led us all down a very interesting and fulfilling path. Truly a man who believed in walking the talk, he will be missed. http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/08/08/ray-anderson-dies-green-buildi…
  • Daddy_Dead
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    Talk about current, new "Greatest Story" and "Playing" streaming
    I guess in celebration of Grateful Dead Night at AT&T Park last night, ESPN.com is celebrating with five streams from Rhino's "Europe" package. Apparently Greatest Story Ever Told” (Paris) and “Playing In The Band” (London) are previously unreleased. Here's that link: http://sports.espn.go.com/espn/thelife/music/news/story?id=6843348 Let me know /// D.Dead
  • marye
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    indeed
    and hey riggsjr, check in and let us know you're OK.
  • TigerLilly
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    HEAR HEAR!!!!!!!!
    excellent post jonapi! ********************************** I am not young enough to know everything. Oscar Wilde
  • Anonymous (not verified)
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    Taller
    Seemed much quieter here in London last night; not so for other cities in the UK though. Wolverhampton, West Bromwich, Manchester...Really nice to see locals getting together with brooms and cleaning up the streets themselves; gives me great heart. Police increased by 10,000 but worryingly permission has been given to use plastic bullets should the need arise. Not a good idea. You are dealing with young people who truly do not care about what they're doing. Rounding them up is one thing but using firearms? That way madness lies. Further to some points i was making yesterday, there are other important factors that need to be addressed. Certainly, the closing of youth related projects and centres does not help. In Clapham, where some of the rioting took place yesterday, a youth worker said that 4 youth centres had been closed in that area alone. Clapham is not even very big. The old saying, "the devil makes work for idle hands" is very very true. It is school/college/university holidays here and without parental guidance, somewhere to use that energy and adrenalin in a productive fashion; mix in resentment, frustration, poverty and alienation and what we've seen these last few days is bound to happen. And parental guidance is very important. People are having children at younger and younger ages; they themselves are not capable of looking after their own lives, so how on earth are they to care for someone else's? They do not have the life skills, the values and moral strength instilled in them to pass it on. This isn't meant to be patronising; i couldn't have taken on such responsibility at 18, 19 or even 20 years old. Some do of course, this does not apply to everyone. There are some remarkable young people doing an incredible job, whether the child was planned or unplanned. Let's not paint everyone with the same brush. But what outlook do you think some of these kids should have? Some are born into a flat on the 23rd floor of a grim high rise in dirty concrete surroundings. Just down their road is smart cafés, restaurants and bars; London, like a lot of cities all over the world is incredibly schizophrenic in design and social standing. I used to work in Angel, Islington; plenty of trendy bars and eateries in the high street outside the tube station. Go around the corner and there's a pleasant (and probably expensive) school for juniors; next road is a row of very expensive houses and a secure garden in the square, always well maintained. A few short steps and there is a block of council flats, dirty, rubbish on the floor, pokey shops and 12-14 year olds in school uniform smoking spliffs before another day wasted in the classroom. The Parcelforce guy wouldn't deliver to the front doors in the flats because even if the van was locked, it would get broken into. He now buzzes the intercom and waits downstairs until the recipient collects. All this is one street away from rich houses (including many television/celebrity owners); these kids have to walk past these to get to school (if they choose to go of course). Now, that isn't to say it's rich people's fault necessarily; some have studied damn hard and gone to Medical School and are doing positive things for others; they can't help being born into a more privileged background anymore than poorer kids being born into low-income grime. (Beliefs in reincarnation not withstanding). But when the cost of living is rising and wages, if you have any, are stalling; when you are treated differently (and people, don't fool yourselves that they don't recognise a condescending look in their direction; we may think we hide it well, we're just looking, but these kids know what most are thinking - black hooded waster, criminal, drug taker). A childhood of that together with absent parents; role model desertion and no money; bleak surroundings and police harassment; raging hormones and zero prospects. Well, let's face it everyone, we have an ammunition factory ready to blow. Something has to be done. Fairer conditions for all; genuine investment in certain areas; investment in youth projects is massively important. Why don't these corporations donate computers to youth centres in poorer areas? Musical instrument manufacturers donating or loaning equipment to projects; set up a community centre that has things that kids simply can't afford. Musicians and artists should regularly give talks and demonstrations in schools. Fashion designers, hairdressers, top stylists, writers, actors; would it be so hard to take some time away from what you do and spend a week showing some of these extremely bright kids just what is possible? A lot of these kids don't even know that you can make a living doing this; that you don't necessarily need to go to a University to be creative or have access to technology and ideas. Scientists, physicists and computer programmers should also regularly attend schools and design projects that would blow a kid's mind. In most cases i bet, these kids simply aren't aware that these things exist. When your daily routine is smoke, school, no parents, getting aggressively shouted at for the slightest misdemeanor (the amount of times i've witnessed a mother literally scream in a 2 year old's face for having the temerity to gently and smilingly reach out at a shiny candy bar in a supermarket and then usually getting a slap is for it's trouble is criminal; abuse pure and simple); when the parent's have no idea how to cook and all meals, if they get one, is chips, fried chicken or microwaved slop; if the parent is out at their third job so they can make ends meet and intimidation and argumentative aggression is an everyday occurence then they will not have the time or the simple chance to be exposed to some of the most incredible things human beings can achieve. Work-placements should be mandatory for large companies; computer graphics and radio, film and art and music and literature and sport and science and medical and spiritual practices and organisations should all be a large presence in schools from a young age. Blow their little minds and show them what can be achieved, rich or poor. Give them something they won't forget. Treat them like little adults and listen to what they have to say and how they express their emotions. Give them examples of the more out-there approach you can take to life and still be responsible and kind to others around you. If you're busy being creative or are filled to the brim and bursting with enthusiasm you have no time to even consider rioting or fighting or drinking or robbing or killing. Time would be too precious. Until we go in that direction, as Frank says, "there's no way to delay, that trouble comin' every day". Well, that's what i think, for what it's worth. And lastly, to end this rather over-long ramble, i'm reminded of something Stephen Fry once said; and to condense and paraphrase really quite wildly here, he basically remarked that if you look out if the window, Nature itself is unconditionally beautiful - the arctic, the deserts, the oceans; the only ugly things you will ever see out the window are things made by Man. And if, from your earliest age, looking at the world, you see yourself as a member of a species that can only uglyfy and spoil the world, it gives you a deep sense of guilt; guilt being the major cause of aggression and that why you get violence, because you feel guilty and worthless; ou feel worthless if you don't believe you are part of a species that is actually capable of producing beautiful things, which we are; in terms of architecture, in terms of painting, in terms of music and all kinds of things. Beauty is possible and is good.
  • trailbird
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    where does the time go ?
    right now I'm having a pint of Cherry Garcia ice cream and reminissing.
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Nuclear power! Carcinogenic cell phones! The Stanley Cup! and the usual parade of kids dancing and shaking their bones, politicians throwing stones, etc. Discuss.

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Lew Alcindor, Walt Chamberlain and and Elgin Baylor have been confirmed as nominees for Sec. of Defense, Nat. Sec. Adv. and Sec. of the Treasury. Republicans have vowed to drop all opposition to this all-star line-up heavily slated toward African-Americans and they are expected to sail through confirmation proceedings. Obama is expected to have substantive discussions over blunts after Wed. night pick-up games at a rec. gym in the blighted corners of SE Washington DC..
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Please Mr.Tarrantinino, spare us. We know violence comes from a variety of factors: *** Easy exposure to guns *** Video Games *** Movies, Television and other media Mental Health? Are we really ready to say people are 15 times more crazy in this country than every other civilized country in the world? (Violent murders based on a per capita basis). Perhaps, but I believe due to unique factors within this country that make people mentally sick. I hope Tarrantino enjoys his toys. He is getting emotional in interviews because he knows in his heart he is partly to blame. Clockwork Orange anybody?
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“One good thing about music, when it hits you, you feel no pain.” ― Bob Marley Event Info: Doors @ 8PM Opening Act: Jellyface (8:30-9:30PM) Headlined by: The Remnants (10:00PM-1:00AM) Admission: Free Please read for more info below: The Newtown Memorial Fund will be sponsoring a new way to share love with those who have been effected by Sandy Hook. "Deadheads For Sandy Hook" will be hosted at the Eleven Bar and Grille on Friday, January 25th, and will celebrate the power of music through tough times. Donations will be collected at the door by members of the Newtown Memorial Fund, a fund that is working to help to rebuild both the school and community after the tragic incedent. The night will be hosted and headlined by The Remnants, The Remnants are 2 year veterans of Connecticut's own Gathering of the Vibes and have very graciously agreed to headline the night for and evening of great music, dancing and fun, they will also be joined by special guest guitarist Eduardo Macias. The night will also feature Connecticut's own "Jellyface" who will be opening the night with a special acoustic set. All who can donate are asked to, admission for the night will be free, and doors will open at 8PM. A 50/50 raffle will be held and any who would like to sell handmade Sandy Hook memorabilia are welcome to. Please spread the word to friends and family that the Deadhead community will be doing their part in supporting Sandy Hook Elementary on 1/25/13. More information is also available via http://www.TheRemnantsCT.com or http://www.Facebook.com/TheRemnantsCT & http://www.Facebook.com/TheElevenBarAndGrille
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Meanwhile, the Sheriff's Association in NH held a"youth gun raffle" to raise money for their sporting organization. The best thing that can come out of Sandy Hook is a ban on assault rifles and multi-round clips. We may not get it in this Congress but it is coming. And that will only be a first step. Hunters and people who want/need personal protection can have it. The rest of these yahoos can start turning in their guns, or we'll pry them from their cold dead fingers!
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NY is poised to enact tougher laws on guns, including reporting people who may be mentally unstable. As well, limiting clips to 7 and stiffer jail sentences for illegal possession. Hoo-Ray! VP Biden's study/findings are to come out soon and the battle between the gun nut minority and the mass of sensible people will begin. Screw LaPierre and the NRA. They're a bunch of freaks and shills for the gun industry! The time to act on gun contrrol with an opening salvo is NOW! Start with: *** A ban on assault rifles *** No more large clips *** Ban the sale of body armor Get that done and then go on to *** No universal personal conceal carry right without permit *** Limit the number of weapons per household to 2 or 3 *** All guns must be in lockboxes Of course, with 200,000,000 guns in circulation we're all doomed to random mass murder for the next 100 years or more. Ehhwww! That is stinking karma!
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Most of us are familiar with such countries as Afghanistan; Zimbabwe; Pakistan; Somalia; Yemen; Central African Republic. There are many more on the fringe, such as Nepal. These are due to human weakness. There are at least that many countries destabilizing into chaos because of global warming. The one in the news today is Mali (think Timbuktu). A section of that country the size of France has been taken over by Islamic extremists and the French have recently sent a small amount of troops in (2500) to stabilize the country. As US drones overfly the country it is sure that nothing will take out this base of terrorist operations except a force at least the size of the US occupying armies in Afghanistan. Consumed with our trials and tribulations we spare nary a thought to suffering people in far-off lands. Rather, we conspire to keep as much wealth as possible within our grasp (personal, family, country). Then we ram our culture down other people's economic throats to ensure that wealth stays here and we see the result of having everything without meaningful limit. There are many good, decent people who would gladly live a smaller imprint if it could be arranged. We all know it. We just arranged our society in such a way to reward conspicuous consumption. So sad... Sorry to be preachy, just thinking of a certain refugee camp of 50,000 displaced Syrians in Jordan where people are shivering in a living hell on earth and what king of petty battles over worthless crap I'm going to fight today.
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Go Obama, go! This is a legacy issue for him. The ad. with his daughters was just mean. The NRA is mean. The gun nuts are mean! This debate is horribly ugly. Mean people suck - mean people with guns should be locked up! It isn't about mental health background checks! It's about the availability of guns -- Duhhh! There is a sheriff in in Oregon who has written VP Biden saying he will not enforce any new gun law because it is unconstitutional. Find that guy and strip him of his badge and throw him in jail. There is no thinking, intelligent position for more availability of guns.
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The Repubs. want to mint a trillion dollar coin to raise the debt limit. Then deposit it in the US Treasury as an asset. Talk about living in a fantasy world! A coin with the actual value of one trillion dollars would weigh 1.333 million pounds at 7500.00 per ten ounces (the current market price of the base metal to be used - Palladium). Get ready for soaring interest rates and inflation. Nobody has the balls to do anything. We are living in fantasy land folks - the gun nuts, the budget cutters, the war hawks. This is complete denial.
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and dead.net. with all of the absurdity surrounding us daily, sometimes it's hard to believe that all of us aren't running around with prozac in a pez dispenser.THAT would be understandable human behavior. -"without love day to day, insanity's king"
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...better than hell in a bucket! (&);~}} Yeahhh, I'm lovin' Furthur at the moment. Think I'll stay up with some fine wine on this fine wintry evening and snort a little zoloft.
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By a continuous process of inflation, governments can confiscate, secretly and unobserved, an important part of the wealth of their citizens. By this method, they not only confiscate, but they confiscate arbitrarily; and while the process impoverishes many, it actually enriches some". John Menard Keynes Despite the rosy markets and lack of a huge fight over the debt ceiling, the Fed continues to pump $85 Billion a month into the economy by just printing money. The government has decided to not make any painful decisions and not continue to spend on wasteful military programs and necessary reforms in entitlements (not cuts, reforms) . The tax code will not be reformed. This means that within 7-10 years the interest on the national debt will go to one trillion dollars per year. One trillion that cannot be used on education, infrastructure, health, care of the less fortunate. Foreign countries who pour money into Treasury Bonds, thereby cheaply financing our growing debt, WILL INEVITABLY raise the amount of interest they demand because of our government's fiscal madness. This will in turn lead to higher interest rates and a contraction in the economy, coupled with inflation as high as 100% per year for some time. Our politicians who only care about power and re-election will keep the party going as long as possible. Along with global warming incidents and international instability our way of life and standard of living will change rapidly, for the worse, in ten years. It is now inevitable. The Dow & S&P hitting a five year high today is not, sadly, reality. They drank and fornicated in Rome till it burned. Here in Washington they are drinking the Kool-Aid and want you too also. (Contribute to that 401k) I propose a revolution immediately.
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First of all, NHL hockey is back!!! Meanwhile, go Falcons and go Ravens!! I like the underdogs. Will it be snowing in Foxboro?
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It's gonna be windy, very windy and getting colder by the minute. So windy the field goals will be wobbling again! US NE fans are blessed this year -- we'll even spot you a Gronkowski and kick the crap out of the Ravens. Too bad you ain't a bettin'n man their Ted. We are tailgating as we speak. Look for a stellar performance from Brady. If he wins today and in the SB he becomes the all-time best QB, bar none. Bring on K and the 49ers -- they are worthy!
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Good to see the better team win: Flacco is the man! Looking forward to a Baltimore win in the Super Bowl. Say hi to 'gonz Anna
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Next time put your money where your mouth is, I would have given you 8.5 points. If Gronkowski and Asanti Sammuel were healthy it would have been a far different game, far different. Still, congrats to he Ravens, they are one of the few teams not intimidated walking into The Razor. Look for Flacco to go Bake-o against the Big K running the football.
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An unheard of 900,000 people turned out to the capitol mall to brave chilly temps. for Obama's 2nd swearing in,which actually happened yesterday due to a quirk in the calender. Obama is truly the people's candidate. He swore the oath on Lincoln and MLK's bible. If all of this seems extraordinary, it is. This man has the youth (at 52) and vigor to do battle on the budget and gun control in the narrow parameters of his second term. I rarely gush about presidents but this one has already set his legacy with a health care plan and now seems intent on going where the issues are and doing battle. One can only hope it isn't between Japan and China in the Kurile Islands or between Israel and Iran on the issue of nukes His muddy grasp of the economy is the only ting that worries me. Giving free reign to Berenanke and Lew (replacing Geithner) is a recipe for disaster - but, hey - at least not during his second term. He should be on his way to Davos to propose ideas for world peace. We can only hope!
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Is bobbing and weaving, story-telling, history creating in front of the Senate Intelligence Committee on Benghazi. Now, the Republicans are dragging Rice through the mud again so that Hillary can explain why her talking points were correct at the time. She has a blood clot on the head all right, all the Republicans on this committee... Gawd, give this woman a break!
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Corporations are locking up gobs of information and trying to make it private property.I think what happened to the Wikki Leaks founder is happening to a lot of "Freedom Of Information" activists. This guy is in exile in Ecuador now. An expert in the field, a college professor specializing in ethics, said that it was good that these kinds of cases are going before the courts. The government does a terrible job of differentiating between crackers, hackers and open-source/FOI. We need strong delineation of our culture. Criminal crackers need to be locked up, Corporations need to be restrained.
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Agents Smart & 99?
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I just don't understand the people of America. Well, those individuals that are kicking, screaming, and flinging their poo over Big Brother coming to take away their guns, anyway. Anyone with a moderate level of intelligence should be able to read the Constitution and understand that it gave MILITIAS the right to bear arms, not ordinary citizens. Why is it okay to take the Constitution, which was intended to be taken LITERALLY, and warp it to suit one's needs? What's on the verge of giving me an aneurism on a daily basis is how no one seems upset over the fact that our government has continued their policy of unwarranted wiretapping, the right to lock you up for no reason, and now the right to lock you up indefinitely? Policies, might I add, that WERE NOT instituted by President Obama but by former-President George W. Bush. Why is nothing he did during his 8 years in the Oval Office open for ridicule? Why does he get a free pass for putting us all in this predicament in the first place? When is this country going to wake up and realize that we're all responsible for our own actions? Stop expecting everyone else to raise your kids and teach them right from wrong. Stop allowing the media conglomerates to do and say whatever they please, because they're distorting our perception of "reality." Stop trying to make me think and talk and dress and act like everyone else. Like Bob Mould said, "I can't think of anything that makes me more upset. People talk all this rhetoric, forgive but not forget. I don't rape, I don't pillage other peoples' lives. I don't practice what you preach, and I won't see through your eyes."
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In fact, I think more people are employed preserving a communal level of denial. Nice rant though.
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is exactly why i miss gd concerts so much. such a wonderful all day getaway from our daily pursuit of not getting shot, not getting busted and not being homeless - formerly known as life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. also, in the real world, the asylum patients here in wisconsin are now complaining that their much coveted assault rifles - which are just the hottest ticket right now - are being unfairly priced out of their range (**guns that were $900 3 weeks ago at the gun shows are now $2,000 - wpr). to which i would just like to say, "sometimes capitalism is a righteous bitch." tee hee :) (and the patriot act, yeah....................kudzu and colonoscopies are less invasive).
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And can we take a minute to laugh at the stupidity of our fellow citizens thinking it'll be their GUNS that'll keep our government from having its way with us and not EDUCATION? Knowledge is and will forever be more powerful than the most powerful firearm we can construct, and there are politicians over there on the right that want us to believe otherwise. They want us all to be about as bright as sheep so they can treat us as such; sadly, too many of us are already there.
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Ah, the fickle mistress that is the law of Supply & Demand. Guess all the gun nuts should've paid more attention in economics class before they all started losing their collective S.H.I.T. and started buying up guns by the truckload. The weapons manufacturers are once again laughing all the way to the bank while the news media conglomerates spread their messages of fear. It's a shame the Occupy movement(s) didn't do more to open the collective conciousness of the knuckle-draggers and TV zombies. We have too many distractions taking our attention away from the real problems that need fixing. How many fingers need to be pointed at the wrong problem before we finally get back to the root of the problem?
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The most preventable tragedy the Earth faces today. The Mayan calender, widely disregarded now, could be looked at again in terms of the effects of Global Warming. While there are many weather events: the New Jersey super storm, 80% melt of Arctic ice pack and people being swept off the cliffs into the Sea in the LA basin all point to a new reality. There were many international events such as the nuclear incidents in Japan after a Tsunami swamped six of their reactors. Some cultures will die out. Some will make amazing gains and and many others will go into chaos with great displacement of people. Does this disaster itself make the Mayan Calender significant? Probably, for almost every living creature on Earth..
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And today Frech forces liberated Timbuktu. But not after these fundamentalists had destroyed ancient scholastic writing and disgraced the tombs of Sufi Masters.
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Sen Pat. Leahy of VT chairs the hearing which was opened by a statement from gun-violence victim and former congressperson Gabby Giffords. Congress is moving to plug the gun show background check loophole, multiple round clips and assault weapons. In Lake Placid, NY in the Adirondacks, LE met with many gun-owners, mostly hunters, who wanted to know the content of the new law passed in NY state. Many said they would be in open defiance of parts of it. 73% of people in NY are in agreement with the new law. To get legislation passed means passing the House. Harry Reid will have to negotiate a watered down deal. Till the next horrific incident when sanity will try to prevail again. Too bad the Norwegian massacre didn't impact our consciousness first (more than it did). The positive thing to take away from this is that it has gone as far as it has. Farther than I ever thought.There is hope for the future.
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12 years 7 months
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I still don't think stricter gun control is the answer to the problem. Our country needs to do a better job of identifying, addressing, and treating mental illness. If the new gun control laws can be enforced to they level they should be, it's a good start, but it's just be the beginning. Otherwise, what happened in Sandy Hook and countless times before will happen again. And again. And again....
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14 years 8 months
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But not just on gun control. Can't fine tune these methods.enough to make a difference --Do you trust the composing/compiling entities?.
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14 years 8 months
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I reviewed his book: "American Sniper" here in this thread. Kyle was the most prolific and successful sniper in American history. Another man was shot, on Kyle's side. Circumstances are not known.
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14 years 8 months
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Out of total production of diamonds in 2008 of 250 Billion, total imports to the government treasury was 150 Million. How can a diamond shoppe, online or in your neighborhood, guarantee that you are purchasing "ethichal" diamonds? (Thanks and a tip of the hackey-sack to Fareed Zakaraia on Robert Mugabe)
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14 years 8 months
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Superbowl Halftime: Beyonce or switch the channel and watchAlaska: Last Frontier Ravens 21-49ers 6
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17 years 3 months
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As a longtime fan of Josephine Tey's "The Daughter of Time," which deals with the perils of the fact that everything we know about Richard III was written by his victorious enemies and those who kissed up to them (e.g. William Shakespeare), I am really interested to hear that they have found what are pretty incontrovertibly his long-missing remains, under a parking lot they were excavating. It will be interesting to see what gets confirmed and what get debunked by this turn of events. As someone pointed out in one of the comment threads, we owe the right to bail to...Richard III.
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12 years 7 months
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"A horse, a horse! My kingdom for a horse!" Very strange yet intriguing tidings indeed! I haven't heard anything about this recent finding of Richard III's remains (under a parking lot, no less!), but then again I don't have as much time for television and the news as I used to. I've always greatly enjoyed Mr. Shakespeare's play involving the king of the same name, so I'll have to keep my eyes and ears out for any and all developments about these findings. Thanks for the tip!
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“Every now and then when your life gets complicated and the weasels start closing in, the only cure is to load up on heinous chemicals and then drive like a bastard from Hollywood to Las Vegas ... with the music at top volume and at least a pint of ether.”HST
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16 years 11 months
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We have the right to protect our famalies, friends and ourselves through the use of our common sense and justified via our fore fathers and a piece of historical importance entitled the Constitution.Granted, it was developed during a different time and place in this world: nevertheless, it is still revelent with the appropriate use and applied common sense to address those areas mentioned but not limited to those areas indicated in the opening paragraph of this discussion forumn such as waiting periods, identifying those with mental illnesses, etc... Please stay SAFE, HAPPY and GRATEFUL! (~):} rickey grant note.....i look forward to hearing and seeing meaningful discussion and debate from ALL ideas and thoughts on this matter...gun owners or not! :)>
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16 years 11 months
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I like ur attitude! (~):} just stay SAFE, HAPPY and GRATEFUL during your drive! 143OR245
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12 years 7 months
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Not too sure who amongst us caught this one, but the Postal Service is planning on cancelling all mail deliveries on Saturday. Now we'll only have five days in the week to empty our mailboxes of flyers, bills, magazines, etc. I don't know about ya'll, but I'm not too terribly upset by this, and I completely understand why they're doing it. At least they're aren't jacking up the price of stamps...yet (again)!
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17 years 3 months
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at Christmas, I am not so happy at the continuing decline of the once-noble post office. At least they will continue to deliver Express and Priority on Saturday.
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14 years 8 months
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Yeah, sort of a bummer that they stopped Saturday delivery. Stamps DID go UP last week. If you haven't been buying "forever" stamps for the last three years you probably should have been. In rural areas like where I am, the post office is a place to gossip and meet up with people (while you cull the junk mail. Which, by the way, now goes into a locked trash storage -- how sad--) I live near a large sort facility that was due to be chopped but got saved through God knows how, horse-trading on votes among the Congressional delegation, I guess. The postal workers walked the picket lines to keep their jobs. For me,it was hard to feel sorry for them. Don't get me wrong, I believe everybody deserves banker's hours and holidays and benefits but nobody gets, them except for a few select industries. I also believe you should get 10 extra points on your exam for "life experience". The USPS will survive, but in a far leaner form and it's not going to get any more efficient.
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12 years 2 months
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just heard on npr that it WILL take congressional approval for the usps to eliminate residential saturday delivery (due date set for august). newspaper companies who have saturday editions are making their voices heard though.i welcome the idea of one less day of mail. i live in a rural area on a dead end road where mailboxes are a long (but welcome) walk. due to them being placed next to a desolate county road, mail theft is an ocassional problem. so one less day of opportunity for the identity thieves is ok with me. i do love the us mail though; always a cracker jack box. you never know what you're going to get - wanted or unwanted. i remember as a little kid sending an envelope with a hand written letter and the appropriate amount of coins off to "bazooka joe bubble gum" for whatever little gizmo they were advertising on that specific bubble gum wrapper and then waitng with a lot of anticipation for its arrival. this was years before instant everything, all-the-time. everybody knew their mailman's name and it wasn't uncommon to have him stop just long enough on cold winter days to have a couple of sips of hot coffee. i feel fortunate to have those memories - fuzzier now - but there nonetheless ;-)
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I live in a rural area where we don't have delivery, just PO Boxes, so this won't effect me much, except for the one hour on Saturdays when the PO is open to dispense items that are too large for a customer's box. In a way, I think that this change might be a positive one, although it may not seem like it at first, since our society has a tendency to hang onto some ideals, such as government delivery of mail and electoral colleges, that have long since used up their usefullness. There was a time when it took an organization like a government to marshal the resources required to set up and maintain a service like the postal service, but that's not the case anymore.
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The greatest sniper in US military history (retired), a Navy Seal, was shot and killed along with his buddy at a shooting range by a young veteran with PTSD they were there to help. I wrote about his book here in this thread about 9 months ago. This is so freakin' sad and unbelievably ironic. Chris Kyle went through some of the worst firefights in Baghdad and hardly had a scratch. He had almost 200 confirmed kills. It took loose gun laws in his home nation to get him. I wonder what he would have thought of the idea that he fought for the freedom of western civilization only to have that freedom end his own life with senseless gun violence. I feel like I 'm looking at 50,000 years of evolution when in reality we have about 12.... We just don't get it about guns. If you get a chance to read American Sniper by Chris and his wife I highly recommend it for insight into the war in Iraq (2003-12). The story he writes tells a lot, not so much for what his sentiment is as for the obvious conclusions and meaning between the paragraphs. For me as a Buddhist it showed the result of karma of killing probably more than 200 people in one decade. There are immutable laws, even if the law of man allows killing with impunity during war.
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Perhaps God was simply trying to let the rest of the Vatican know he wants someone worthwhile for the job next time. That, and He wants all those pedophile priests that keep turning families away from the church to put it in their pants and keep it there. Like, NOW.
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12 years 2 months
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i like b, a lot, so i made an honest attempt last night at watching his address, but as luck would have it, my self-preservation instincts kicked in and i fell asleep about 10 min. into it. what an exercise in ego massage this always is, no matter the party elect.with that said, i would like to see all of the lights in the capitol building wired directly to the "clapper". That way, this silliness of standing and applauding at every 5th word spoken would stop and the linguistic fertilizer could be restricted to the appropriate 10 min. span....... of which i could have successfully completed a viewing. the remaining 1 hr. and 50 min could then be used to saturate the american air space with something useful and entertaining such as the bugs bunny/ road runner show. and the catholic church? they should take frank zappa's old advice and hire a pope who smokes dope and be done with it. they're in dire need of a plausible scapegoat anyway and at least with this idea, they'd have one.
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I didn't watch it. I'll be honest and up front about it. Yeah, sure, I voted for another four years of the three-ring circus act that is Washington, D.C., but largely because he was clearly the better man for the job. I do agree with slo lettuce, though, that it's largely an exercise in massaging one's ego. Not sure if anyone here is familiar with the website/Facebook group "Being Liberal," but they posted an excellent quote from Mr. Carl Sagan this morning: "The US should legalize marijuana, tax it, and send all the proceeds to NASA. NASA would inspire kids to explore the universe and pot would inspire adults to explore the universe." Who knows, now that we have 2 out of 50 states who've legalized recreational marijuana use, we might be going somewhere revolutionary in terms of how this country views drugs and drug use. It would be nice, though, if our tax dollars could be spent more on exploration and discovery than on our growing paranoia complex. We as a country would do well with a little more introspection.